im mm mmmm
I llv 1'IIANK JENKINM
1'Un Intent Irom Kojo:
"Brigadier General Hnvdon L,
Douitiier (described In the din
wrlchpa an linrd-blUen General
lloulnerl mild loduv lio linn cracked
I hp rpulntuiice nl Koje Island's SO,
out) onue. delimit red war prla
uners." How did he da II?
lip took u I'hnncp, an soldier
Wind tn, mid UHlilD MEN ENOUGH
In handle the situation. An unuullv
happens, linn dlaulnllne, backed by
lulcqualo force, turned the trick.
Thul loadi la an Intcrr-stlng
Ihounht:
I' ll in, FAIR, comtellt illnct
pllne, bneked by adequate inrce.
would anlvii miml ol the problem
thiit luce un In thin world. I know
"dlndpllne" In a rough, rugged,
hhdIiih word. The Idea ol It turnn
the hair on the back ol our
ncrkn. We (Inn't like It.
We don't like, ennlor oil. Yet
(here ale fines when ranlor oil In
UM'lul Nobody liken the Idra of
nn cipernl.oii. Yi.i there are ninny
tlini'n when operation HAVE
LIVKB.
I am beginning to doubt whether
n world can be run without din
tlplliie. The other dnv Prenldent Truman
ltd tlie congress inl a'lolnt era
hiSi of Ihr houne and ncnate aa
nomblpd In the houxe chambpri
lor tHiwrr to clw and operate the
struck ntrel Induntry.
'the ncuule IIMenrd lo hit ulea.
thPii:
1 It rplpclrd, by a vole of 68
lo 13, a plnn bv Senator Mavbnnk
lo ban atrlkpa III ennenllitl Indus
trlci for 130 dnvn and prrmlt
nullum If cither mile relcclcd Ml
lleiiipnl ternin proponed by a
government board. i
J. It turned down. 6a to 28. a i
proposal bv Senator Monruncv to
nvlre nllpr aeven davn notice to the I
disputant and two dnva notice to
rnnureaa. which would then have
la daya to veto tlie aelrure.
3. It defeated, 41 lo 33. a move
bv Senator Humphrey to empower
the Prenldent to nplte an many
alee) inilbi an may be neceaaary to i
meet defenno needa.
Having thua gone on record.
three timea In a row. aualnnt sol
aura of tlie ateel mllla aa a meann
of nettling a atrlke. the aenate then
voted. 49 to 30, lo reguenl that
Prenldent Truman Ue lite Tall
HartlPV law and aepk a court In
junction aitalnat continuance of the
trlke. '
Thla l the point:
Prenldent Truman hn repealedlv
refuaed to une Uie Tall-Hartley law
tn an elforl to nettle the atrlke1.
Oood or bad, the Talt-Harllev law
. n.a LAW fir THE LAND. Mr.
Truman aaya he doubts If It would ;
work. . ...
The aenale aava plainly lo him:
"Try It flrnl. and BEE wheUier II
will work."
Pernonally. I'm Inclined to doubt
,nh..he,or.o,.hed"T,?e Ml
XJ"XL T.fJCrSil &wortd
TmT$X V.S
vlltly Interval during which a
strike would be forbidden. U
r.nr Innkn Ilka at the end of the
t RID WW, niuu ' "
nil, far Uie feelint: on both (Idea,
u.'hirh ! hittpr and anarv now,
would probably be even more bit-
,, .nrf .nurv at the Ind of Uie
e:
a Amu ininnfiinn nerind.
But I certainly can't help wonder- ,
inn where we are at If the Presl-
dent of Uie uniwa maies. wn
duly under the constitution la to
admlnlsler the laws that r
missed bv congress, can REFUSE
to administer a law uini nan al
ready been nasned by the congress.
That looks to me tike UTTER
CONFUSION. I wonder what the
Founding Fathers would have
thought (and said) If It had been
auggeated to them that the time
would come when that could hap
pen. I Imagine they would have been
horrified.
Grange Bans
Loyalty Oath
LA GRANDE W The 1B53 con
vention ol the Oregon Slnte Grange
will be held at Medford.
That was decided here Thursday
bv delegnlea lo this year's con
vention who selected Medford over
Albany and The Dalles.
Mont of Thumdny' i ncsnlon was
tnken up with voting on some of
Ihe 88 resolutions that were sub
mitted earlier.
Opposition was almost unani
mous to a resolution which called
(or n state law requiring teachers
tn Ikii nn niill-Coinnuinlst loyally
Or. Rod O. Langntnn, president
of Eastern Oregon College of Edu
cation spoke against the resolution.
He said It would not eliminate
Communism and would single out
teachers aa a group to be humili
ated. The Grange voted to Join Uie
Oiegon Council of Churches In Its
Initiative campaign to ban pnrl
mulucl betting at dog and horse
laces.
The stale's revenues from racing
now are divided among the coun
ties to help support such farm ac
tivities as county fnlra and live
stock shows.
Continuing support of an initia
tive measure to make standard
time uniform throughout the statu
also was voted.
The Orange went on record as
opposing nn Initiative measure to
decontrol milk prices nl wholesale
and retail levels.
Other resolutions approved by
the Grunge called for:
Public listing by the governor of
disorderly beer taverns.
Renewal of the present tariffs
on dairy products.
Legislation to restrict and con
trol highway billboard advertising,
Transfer of tax collecflon duties
from the offices of county sheriffs
to county troasurcra.
CORRECTION
Oiadtmtlon ceremonies for the
First Baptist Church annual sum
mer Bible school will 'be held to
night al 8 p.m. at the church rath
er Winn last night as previously
repoTMd In the Herald and Newt.
L. t"t 1 : ' 'l"1-- '' I ' - - i ,
X J: j
JANET DIERDORFP
Ninth Girl Gets
In Queen Contest
HI LLKTIN
l.e than an hour before slgn
up deadline, a ninth queen can
didate filed her application with
the Koundnp Headquarters. She
la Hetty Mae Hammond, 18,
daughter of Mr. and Mr. Wil
iLmmond.Mnlln.
li y WALLACE MVER8
A nennt two houra before the
deadline for Roundup queen candl-
daten thin morning, Janet Dior-
&i;er0.n &
'"" brunette; beautya lentranc.
' U d.nduluurlot.1 to ...hi,
mm m
I AtMAMHAIII m
Dressup Day
j... t -i, i..iito her horses, her fttvnrit hnhhv
Baninltea to break mil In Wetornl'
imnrrn i. r),i,m nwu. '
wn,v and all fun-loving Roundup
boosters are execied lo get in and
add sparkle to tlie holiday spirit
with gnv calicos. 10-gallcn hata and
other picturesque attire.
The gny clothes are lo be worn
until the Roundup Is over.
Roundup enthusiasts on horse
back will ride along downtown
Klnmnth Falls streets tomorrow
allernoon urging everyone to get
In Western drens. There will be no
kangaroo court to fine those In
convention! clothes .'. . the kan
garoo court will, however, function
within a few days. When that time
conies, all persons not properlv at
tired In tlie Roundup spirit are li
able to be roped In and fined. It's
(Continued en Paga 4.)
.s
fe Jim
I , J
v v . y p m
'I i i
SHORTY, A CINNAMON bear from Montana, is attracting
considerable attention from motorists on US 97 these days
as he lies beside the road up where construction work is
going on south of Modoc Point. Shorty, a year old, is
tamo and belongs to W. L, Lowe, who has a job flagging
traffic through the construction area.
inrniilwt one iilrl will hnve to be
ellinlllatcd. Tills ellmUinUon will
come at Ihc queen candlrtntea
homemannhip trials at the Fair
grounds Sunday afternoon.
COURT
The Roundup court of royalty la
comprised of the queen and six
princesses. The seven are chosen
on horsemanship and final selection
of the queen comes at the Queen's
Ball. Horsemanship counts 60 per
cenl n poise and personality at
the bnll counts 40 per cent. The
queen la the girl with Ihe Inmost
combined -aeore from the Falr
grounda and ball content.
Tills morning's surprise entry,
Janet Dlerdorff, Is 17 and a Merrill
High School Junior. She Is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Dlerdorff.
Janet Is a fine horsewomen. Just
now. she', spending a good deal of
her spare time grooming her newly
acquired quarter horse colt. Next
'"""iK. I
FIELD
The other seven queen cnndl
dntcs are: Carol Hamilton Klam
ath Falls; Barbara Jenn Anderson,
Moceloel: Anne Curry, Henley;
Sharon Flnchum, Henley; Mariana
(Piinkini Hellekson. Lanitell Val
ley; Aurella Patterson, klamnlh
Fulls; and Pol Nicholson. Fort
Klamath.
The girls may all be seen on
their horses In downtown Klamath
Falls tomorrow. They are to Join
other riders In urging everyone lo
dress Western lor the Roundun
days.
Tomorrow night, tlie girls are lo
be Introduced publlcallv at an
Armory dnnce. Ole Rosmussen.
whose Nebraska Cornhuskers are
playing for the dance, will intro
duce uie girls.
W - n V I 1 M
Price Five Cent II Pafea
Big Three
Confer On
Germany ,
By JOHN M. IIIGIIT0WI:R
wahhinoton I The Western' , B """ ;"uu"",'" """i
iWA."'J:0T "ifl ;' Wmm barley fields here. !
M. Thr. mmprn were nnoited
seeking flniil airreemmil amonJ ' A tolfll 01 116 ,on? 01 Pou,onea i 10unrt "icctive In use against
conditions under which they would i0'm 8Cre 01 rley fields as a j The whole operation, lasting ev
be willing to discuss German Is- Protection against a horde of hop- oral weeks, was accomplihed
sues with Russia. l' migrating out of the surround-, without Injury to personnel. It In
state Department olflclala said , l,re1 hatching beds. volved hundreds of hours of flying
alter talk between Secretary Ach- j Control Specialist Sam Smith, lime bv several planes of the A. V.
eson and the British and French !out of the USDA office. Sacramento Pest Control Co.. flying out of the
ambassadors here that there wn j called the operation "very success- jTulelake Municipal Airport and out
no basc disagreement on the aub- lul" In most cases, but sold 10 of a graded airstrip near the Lava
ject of a Big Four meeting "pro- i tons of poison bait was being held , Beds National Monument's Captain
vided certain conditions are met." I In reserve lor later use If the hop- Jack's stronghold.
They did not specify the condl- pers should break out once more. I Numerous government agencies
lions, but declared that none ol the . He said between 60 and 100 : cooperated with the farmers, ao
three Western powers was wiling! acres of barley was totally ruined 'ceptlng 60 per cent of the costs
to agree to a session on Soviet-1 by the Infestation. because the hopper hatching beds
dictated terms. I ..It-, remarkable though." he vm for a good part on govern-
AGKEEMENT
The need for agreement among
the three arises from the fact
that tlie latest Western note In a
long scries of exchanges Willi
Moscow Is now In preparation.
The Russians have been insisting
on a Big Four session lo take up
the unification of Germany and
the preparation of a German peace
treaty.
In previous notes, the Western
powers have lnsirfed that prior to
a discussion of those fundamental
problems the four natloas should
agree upon a United Nations' or
other "Impartial" Investigation of
the opportunity for free elections
throughout, pastern, and Westscp
Germany. K - - , 1
When work on the projected new
Western note started, WashlngUm,
Paris and London reviewed their
positions and came up with sug
gestions as to what they should
tell the Russians this lime.
The French have been reported
favoring an offer to meet with the
Russians at an early date provided
the conference would be limited
lo the conditions for holding free
elections In Oermany and the cir
cumstances In which the unuica
lion would be effected.
INDICATIONS
There have been some Indica
tions that Ihe British also would
be willing to make such a proposi
tion but tlie United States has been
represented as not favoring a
meeting until agreement Is
reached with Russia on making
an impartial inquiry into political
conditions throughout Germany.
British Anibnsnador Sir Oliver
Franks and French Anibnssndor
Henri Bonnet conferred with Ach
eson late Thursday. They conceded
the problem of drafting a note to
the Russians had been discussed
but that was about all they would
say.
Huge Crowd
Sees Parade
PORTLAND I More than a
m.nHtAK ...tlllnn luinnln hi- nlir-A .
.i!,r,,. m:,.H inn'r miles nf 1
Portland streets today as the an- Partly elondy with scattered after
nunl Podeo Festival parade went , noon showers Friday afternoon
bv with tootling band and decon-, through Saturday. Local frost again
final. Frldav nicht. High today 60. low
Police Cnpt. Eiitfcnc Ferguson
made the crowd estimate ol 2o0,
000 to 215,000 mid said lie might
revise 11 upward. It was a little
smaller than laet yenr, he snid,
possibly held down by a forecast
of rnih,
Red Resistance Dawn
In Koje
KOJE ISLAND. Korea Wl Brig.
Gen. Hnvdon L. Boatner said Fri
day ho has cracked the resistance
of Koje Island's BO.OOO once-defi
ant Red war prisoners.
Communist - led POWs knuckled
under four times Friday to United
Nations authority. Boatner. the
tough prison camp commander,
then suspended for two or three
dnys operations to break up the
large groups of prisoners. This
was lo permit construction of new
enclosures.
Boatner would not co so lar as
to sbv that all resistance Is ended.
Biit It Is "definitely oil the ebb and
believe the worst Is over," ne
told a newsmnn.
I would not be at all surprised
at soino future incidents ,. . , but
I have plans to cope with them."
Three prisoner compounds bowed
meekly to Allied authority. Then
prisoners In anolhor, No. 85, re
sponded to nn ultlmntum by Boat
ner and surrender 21 antl-Commu-nist
prisoners.
I wnnt no speeches," the hard
bitten commander told five Red
compound lenders. "Get back to
that compound .and release those
FALLS, OREGON,
Hoppers Beaten
From Tule Area
j TULELAKE A ground and air
i battle oKalnnt overwhelming num-
ibers of grasshoppers has been won
i"' . .
ild. "that damage was held down
More Frost
Hits Basin
Klamath farmers who worry
about frost and politics were wor
rying more about the frost for the
second straight day today.
Freezing temperatures scattered
frosl throughout the Basin during
Ihe night, in some spots knocking
down potato fields which hadn't
peon hit earllen A
The temperature in ddwntown
Kltfmatli Falls was recorded at 37
degrees, while the CAA thermom
eter measured 31 degrees.
Potato fields In many localities
were black and shriveled from the
cold, and there may have been a
little damage done to other crops.
I Local agricultural experts said,
however, much downed grain and
alfalfa had been dropped by high
winds enrlicr this week and the
heavy rain-logged snow tnai pre-
ceded the frost.
There was little doubt that most
fields would come back, though it
was agreed there would be a con
siderable set back In potato plants.
Some late-planting farmers who
had yet to see their spuds come
up were patting themselves on the
back.
There was some. damage In clo
ver reported.
Blossoms which eventually would
have produced seed were frozen in
some spots, and will never develop
further. One farmer estimated he
will lose about 1Q0 pounds of alsike
seed lo Uie acre because of the
two days of frost.
Had frosts come 10 days or so !
inter, ihc wiuikj ne"a
ported even more extensive and
complete damage would have been
caused.
The weather bureau In PorUand
forecast another local frost for to
night, with a Klamath Falls low
of 35 degrees predicted.
FORECAST Klamath Falls and
vlllnitv and Northern California
tonigm J. nign inmnrrow 01,
lllih temperature yesterday .. 53
Low Inst nl-ht - - 27
Preclp vestray "1
Since Oct. 1 MM
Normal for nerlod 11.56
Same nerlod last yr 14.84
Island Camp
men bv 5 D.m.l
At 4:55. the leaders delivered
the 21 to the compound gate. Three
of Uie 21 dashed their Red-starred
caps to the ground In what has
come to do a gesture of anti-communism
on Koje.
All 21 told of being starved, beat
en and tied. Nino were in such
bad shape Uicy wore tnken to the
camp hospital. Two had to be lift
ed to a truck for removal, said Lt,
Col. Walter M. Redden of Anniston,
Ala., commander of a valley In
which half the compounds are lo
cated.
Some prisoners. Redden said.
showed "gruesome" multiple bruis
es on the legs.
compound 85 Is where- tank-sup
ported American Infantrymen
forced removal of communist
flags and signs last week.
Six of Kole's 17 stockades of
stubborn, Red-led prisoners have
been emptied during Bontner's op
eration breakup.
About 27,000 prisoners have been
dispersed Into, smaller stockades
of 500 each, or transferred to new
pens to await completion of small
er enclosures.
FRIDAY, JUNE 13, 1952
imimmm
Peatismaaia.
to that In this large an acreage."
Besides the bran, he said aldrin
u tv-ino .nr. .,..rQi
thousand more acres. Aldrin is a
chemical poison which -has been
cnemicai poison wnicn nas Deen
"'' r"e'n pui up m
was earlier estimated for about
25.CO0.
Farmers and local businesses of
fered labor and equipment, in
cluding Bob Walker. Merrill, who
came through with equipment in
a pinch for the hopper-fignters. The
Newell Prison Camp akso provided
help when a labor shortage de
veloped during bran-poison mixing
operations early in the program.
House Okays
Money Bill
WASHINGTON Wl ' The House
sent to the Senate Friday the
administration's first regular mon
ey authorization bill to pass this
j session without being cut drasu-
cally
The measure, authorizing 2,
758.318.000 for worldwide military
programs next year, was passed
by the House Thursday on a 332
to 7 roll call vote. The actual ap
propriations will be voted later.
Administration requests were cut
$19,434,000 by the Armed Services
Committee but no further effort
was made on the floor to propose
heavier reductions.
The committee also eliminated
250 mllion dollars earmarked as
the American share of European
airfields for the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization. But this was
done to get the item Included in
foreign aid funds. The committee
said the fields are essential.
The House previously cut thi
haic, hitrirot Kv mw in ner
cent and the foreign aid bill by
more than 20 per cent. The con
struction bill was described as the
third essential money measure
for the worldwide military buildup.
Jill
.
( IP
In
MORNING GROCERY shoppers are today's 9 o'clockers.
The two girls are (1 to r): Sharon O'Brian, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John O'Brian, 2140 Gcttle Street; and Vlaine
Workman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Workman, 2008
Arthur Street.
No. 2844
Taft Next
Keystone
Visitor
By The Associated Press
Pennnsylvanla's 70 Republicans
convention votes, a keystone In
tne party's selection of a presiden
tial nominee, had a picnic date
Friday with one top contender and
a tentative appointment with the
other. '
Gen. Dwight Eisenhower olaved
host to the Pennsylvania delegates
at his 189-acre farm near Gettys
burg. Pa. The general's chief ri
val for the GOP nrlze. Sen. Rob
ert Taft of Ohio, will confer with
them later, time and place as yet
unannounced.
MEETING .-.
Eisenhower's shirt-sleeve outing
was his first lace-to-face meeting
with most of the Pennsylvania del
egates. It follows a pattern he set
in New York parleys this week:
Offering himself for questions on
campaign issues in hopes replies
would cement pro-Etsenhower
allgnmens and win over the
others.
Taft has turned his full attention
Frlfay to Delaware's 12-member
GOP delegation at a farm near
Wilmington. His plans call for a
pre-convention swing through the
Middle Atlantic states, with visits
to delegations- In Virginia and Mary
land as well as Pennsylvania.
With tlie convention about three
weeks off July 7 at Chicago
neither Taft'nor Elsenhower has
Uie required 604-vote majority-sewed
up. . .
TABULATION
The Associated Press tabulation,
pegged to avowed and conceded
preferences, shows: Taft 464. Ei
senhower 392.
Democrats. meanwhUe. add a
few .more delegates to their July
21 Chicago convention list today
16 in Connecticut and a 22-vote
group In Arkansas.
The Arkansas Democratic com
mittee directed the state's 22 votes
be cast for "favorite son" Sen. J.
William Fulbright as long as the
delegation considered it would be
"appropriate and beneficial to the
party."
W. Averell Harriman was at Og
den and Provo in Utah Friday.
Sen. Robert Kerr of Oklahoma
at Clarksburg. W. Va., and Sen.
Estes Kefauver of Tennessee at
Chattanooga and Knoxville in
his home state.
A fourth. Sen. Richard Rus
sell, of Georgia, hits the road Satur
day on a 15-state stumping tour.
kefauver is ahead of the pack in
pre-convention delegate strength.
The Associated Press scoreboard
credits him with 246, followed by
Russell's 86 '.2 and Harrlman's
85 '2. It takes 616 to win Democra
tic nomination.
Telephone 8111
Strike Said
Political
Football
By WILLIAM G. SMOCK
PITTSBURGH Ufl President
Philip Murray of the atriklni CIO
United Steelworkera told his policy
making aides Friday that the un
ion shop Issues Is only one of four
obstacles holding up settlement of
the 12-day-old steel strike.
Murray, who also heads the nn.
Ion's parent CIO, declared the
steel wage-price dlsnute has be.
come a political football.
ine silvery nairea labor leader
told a Joint strategy session of the
USW executive board and wage
policy committee:
"I do not profess to know how
long the struggle (Strike) will
last."
MANDATE
He was given a rlslna
when he said- it is his purpose lo
j jwur uiHiiuaie ana me
mandate of the last convention."
He referred to a reiolutlon adopt
ed at the union's convention lust
.y wnicn urged a settlement
based on recommendations of the
Wage Stabilization Board.
The WSB recommended a 26
cent hourly raise for steelworkera
now earning an average of be
tween 81.90 and 82 an hour and
also called for a union shop.
In addition to the union shop.
Murray listed these other issues as
blocking a final settlement:
1. The steel Industry's insistence
on a management clause In any
new contract. Murray said such
a clause, defining management's
rights, would allow companies to
launch sDeeduna.
2. The question of seniority. Mur
ray said the U. S. Steel Corn,
wanted all seniority questions re
solved to Its satisfaction.
3 Incentive pay. The labor chief
declared U. S. 8teel also insist
ed on its version of Incentive. ,
4. The union shop. Murray said
the Industry falsely gave out the
Impression that the union shop Is
the only issue. He called that "a
plain unadulterated lie.".
UNION SHOP . ;
But he discussed the union shop
at great length and ridiculed state
ments of steel executives that their
opposition is based on principle
He said they alreadv hd
a union shop to 50 per cent of USW
mt in utra.
When Murray mentioned Sen.
Robert A. Taft (R.-Ohim nri
Dwight D. Eisenhower, both can-
dldaies for the Republican presi
denUal nomination, his audience
booed lustily.
Murray said Taft should have
more sense than lo press for a
court inlunllnn .....I ,t .-
----- uie 1 ill L-
Hartley TlcU Various members of
the audience yelled:
"What sense?" and "He ain't
got no sense at all."
EISENHOWER
Murray called Eisenhower a '
"me loo-er." because Eisenhower
Supported Taft's rierla raLirm Iho,
the Taft . Hartley Act should be '
invoked by President Truman to
get the steel mills back in produc-
uuu.
Refering to the Korean situa
tion. Murray declared them i nn
question "that the boys in Korea
will be provided the equipment
they need."
Murray epened his hour long
address to newsmen in an almost
unprecedented move by his union.
Upon finishing his report on sta- .
tus of union-industry negotiations.
newsmen were hustled out of the
hotel ballroom meeting room.
Steelworkera at the strategy ses
sion jumped to their feet and gave
Murray an ovation of several mi
nutes. Then they went to lunch be
fore going into executive meetings.
' Meanwhile. Mobilization Director
John R. Steelman tackled the prob
lem of removing from the picketed
steel yards and warehouses metal
which already Is finished or partly
finished and delivering it to muni
tions plants. Union leaders attend
ing a .Washington conference
agreed to present Steelman's pro
posal at the Pittsburgh meeting.
Fast breaking developments In
the steel crisis turned the strike
spotlight on Pittsburgh after the
House Banking Committee in Wash
ington voted 15 to 10 against a
proposal that. President Truman be
empowered to seize the steel in
dustry.
Union Leader
Accuses GE
WASHINGTON Wl James B.
Carey, leader of a CIO union of
electrical workers, told senators
Friday that a rival "Communist
controlled union" survives only be
cause of "deliberate, active assist
ance and encouragement of bin
business."
Testifying before a Senate labor
subcommittee, Carey Specifically
named General Electric Corp. Ho
said it professes impartiality In '
the fight between his union and the
rival union for collective bargain
ing rights in the company's plants
but actually follows a "dlvlde-and
rule" policy.
Carey Is president of the Inter
national Union of Electrical, Ra
dio and Machine Workers (CIOi.
The other union is United Elec
trical, Radio and Machine Workers
(UE) which was In the CTO for
many years but was expelled in
1949 on the grounds It was following
the Red line.
"Because of Its size and re
sources the UE has been both a
source of funds and nn ideologicnl
rallying point for other Commun-
nist groups, Carey said. Ana ne
added: ,
'UE offered the Kremlin's espi
onage and sabotage agencies a po
tential access to classified Mid se
cret weapon production up to and
including atomic developments.
'In encouraging ana assisting
the survival of UE, the mulll- .
million dollar corporation In our
Industry have committed some
thing very close to treason.1'